Backslash

joined 1 year ago
[–] Backslash@feddit.de 6 points 5 months ago

Der riesige Vorteil von Raufasertapete (und der Grund warum ich sie wieder drauf pappe) ist mMn dass sie sehr viel verzeiht und kaschiert, wie das auch im Artikel kurz angesprochen wird. In meinem Fall (Altbauwand) war unter der alten Tapete eine unansehnliche Menge von alten Farbschichten, Spachtelmasse und blankem Putz, wo die alte Farbe abgeblättert war. Eh ich versuche, das alles schön glatt zu bekommen und perfekt auszubessern, mache ich lieber das gröbste (was auch schon viel ist) und klatsche dann Raufaser drüber. Ist aber auch nur eine Mietwohnung, im Eigenheim würde ich da vermutlich auch anders rangehen.

Aber jedem das seine, viel Spaß beim Tapezieren!

Dankeschön!

 

Ist zwar schon ein älterer Text von 2022, aber ich bin irgendwie dabei gelandet, weil ich morgen eine Wand auch damit neu tapezieren werd. Was denkt ihr über Rau(h)fasertapete?

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Naja es gibt ja schon einen Unterschied zwischen der Verschlüsselung und der Authentifizierung bei TLS.

Die Zertifikate sind für die Prüfung der Authentizität notwendig (also dass der Server tatsächlich der ist, der er behauptet zu sein) und da kann man durchaus berechtigt diskutieren, dass nicht alle Organisationen, die solche Zertifikate ausstellen, auch vertrauenswürdig sind.

Die Verschlüsselung, um die es hier geht, ist aber trotzdem eine gute Sache und hat nichts mit Sicherheitstheater zu tun. Die sorgt nämlich dafür, dass niemand mitlesen kann, was zwischen dir und dem Server am anderen Ende hin und her geschickt wird. Ist zwar nur begrenzt sinnvoll, wenn man besagtem Server ohne o.g. Authentifizierung nicht immer trauen kann, aber das tut der Nützlichkeit der Verschlüsselung selbst keinen Abbruch.

 

Ich finde es gut, dass man auch mal Berichterstattung liest, die nicht nur gegen GDL und Streikrecht geht. Ramelow scheint auch zu wissen, wovon er spricht, denn er war wohl schon zweimal Schlichter in früheren Tarifstreits mit der Bahn.

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

is sort of essentially blockchain without the decentralized ledger part

So a [Merkle tree](http://www..com/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merkle_tree)?

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 28 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Ollivander, my norwegian loaf

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 15 points 1 year ago

Gentoo is the espresso you get when your coffee-obsessed friend with >$10k worth of barista equipment asks if you'd like a coffee. It's the best damn thing you've ever tasted, but by the time your friend has finished preparing and all the settings are dialed in, it's around midnight and you should have gone home hours ago

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 45 points 1 year ago

Reading the blog post, it's a lot more nuanced than that: someone reported a CVE, which was related to a possible int overflow in client code handling the timeout between requests. NVD chose to grade this as a 9.8/10 on their severity scale (for context, CVE-2014-0160, also known as Heartbleed, got a 7.5/10), which is ludicrous for a bug which could at most change the retry timeout of your request from your intended years to a few seconds. Daniel says that this is not a security vulnerability at all and has no business being listed on the CVE database, whereas NVD argues that it's a bug, it's been reported to them and because overflows are undefined behavior, anything can happen and so it's a security vulnerability.

In the end, they agreed to at least adjust the severity down to a 3.3, but I can understand that Daniel is still somewhat miffed about it. Personally I also agree that it's not really a security issue and that even a 3.3 is too high in terms of severity.

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Many debuggers (at least in the Java world, which is what I'm working with for a living) support more advanced features like only triggering the breakpoint if a certain condition is reached or only every X hits of the breakpoint.

Also, if you try and debug using print in the main game loop, wouldn't that write so much to console/log that it's effectively unreadable?

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 7 points 1 year ago

Tat ich unserer Telekom Unrecht?

Nö, t-online gehört seit 2015 der Werbefirma Ströer. Dem draus resultierenden eher seichten content ist vermutlich auch deine Einordnung des Portals geschuldet. Trotzdem stimme ich dir zu, der Artikel ist echt ausführlich für t-online.

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago

I recently discovered Manic Miners, a remake of 1999's Lego Rock Raiders, and ever since I've been busy reliving my childhood in 1080p. Now if only someone could remake Lego Racers 1&2...

Beyond that, I recently learned that the Steam release of Dwarf Fortress totally passed me by last year, and so I've been getting back into that and I keep marveling at the lovely graphics and the mouse control. I'm happy that I can support the creators this way after years of playing the game every once in a while. Still waiting for stuff like Dwarf Therapist, but for the first time I'm playing DF without tons of add-ons and it's actually pretty neat. I'm looking forward to all the FUN I'll be having! :P

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Interestingly, the guy who made the referenced post, 'avis', is allegedly the new name of 'birdie', a well-known troll on the forums who was banned a while back. Basically everyone there agrees that it's him and no action is taken against this new account.

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 7 points 1 year ago

Especially when the original article is about anything related to Rust. An hour after the article is live you'll have 50 posts arguing and trolling like there's nothing more important in the whole wide world. So entertaining!

[–] Backslash@feddit.de 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (8 children)

Anyone expecting to use Linux the same way they are using Windows, without any changes, is going to be disappointed. You cannot reasonably expect to keep the same learned workflows from one system and use them on a completely different system without having to at least tweak some of it.

Learning is part of such switchovers, and loudly complaining that "Thing X is not working like I know it to, this is why people don't like Linux" is not making anyone more likely to help you nor is it going to solve your problem. I'm glad that you managed to find a way to do what you need in any case, and maybe that command will stick around in the back of your head for when you need something similar sometime in the future :)

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